I read an interesting Telegraph article about this unique London Tube map – a map that shows what each station tastes like. The person who made this map, Mr. James Wannerton from Blackpool, can ‘taste’ words when he reads or hears them, due to a neurological condition called synaesthesia. He first noticed each station had a distinct taste when he was four and lived in North London, while traveling to school. Since then he has continued to keep notes and make special trips to London after leaving the city, and he finally completed his 49-year project of the “taste map” of the Tube earlier this year.

Mr. Wannerton said that the tastes and textures of the stations were incredibly consistent and had never changed. Most of the tastes on the map are of British comfort food such as sausages, bacon, apple pie, HP sauce, as well as Mr Wannerton’s childhood treats such as love hearts, poppets and jelly tots. There are also few peculiar flavours such as “dried blood (Pinner)”, “lether belt (Northolt), “3-in-One Oil (Cannon Street and Gunnersbury)”, and “burnt matches (Holborn)”. Mr Wannerton’s three tastiest stops are Baker Street (Burt Jam Roly-Poly), King’s Cross (Fruit Cake & Dripping), Tottenham Court Road (Sausage & Fried Egg), and the three nastiest stops are Bond Street (hair spray), St Paul’s (Sprouts), Seven Sisters (Spangles). Here are some of the flavours of London’s major stations: